Why Did John Glenn's 1984 Presidential Bid Fail So Badly? (user search)
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
May 29, 2024, 05:46:21 AM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  General Politics
  U.S. General Discussion (Moderators: The Dowager Mod, Chancellor Tanterterg)
  Why Did John Glenn's 1984 Presidential Bid Fail So Badly? (search mode)
Pages: [1]
Author Topic: Why Did John Glenn's 1984 Presidential Bid Fail So Badly?  (Read 1411 times)
Badger
badger
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 40,424
United States


« on: August 27, 2018, 12:16:18 PM »

I remember this issue as I was avidly following the 1984 presidential campaign. Senator Gary Hart was actually the first guy I went door-to-door and calling phones campaigning for.

Remember that the Democratic primary started as Walter Mondale versus the rest. The media initially placed John Glenn is the main Challenger for the nomination. However, neither he nor his campaign were ready. Yes, part of it is he was boring and stiff on the campaign stop. The movie The Right Stuff was supposed to propel him into a major contender. It didn't hurt at all, but I remember one columnist rather aptly noting that when voters looked at Ed Harris's Steely eyed portrayal of Glenn on the big screen, versus the relatively uninspiring real life speaker on the stump, they couldn't help but feel a bit disappointed.

Also, Glenn didn't have a whole lot to contrast with Mondale. They were nearly identical on most the issues, with Mondale perhaps being a bit more unions and protectionism friendly, but only by degrees. However, Glenn was somehow portrayed, as much by his own campaign as the media, as something of a more moderate choice. And I think we all know, the term moderate frankly doesn't appeal to meny Democrats, or Republicans, or even Independents. It Comes crosses mealy-mouthed, indecisive, and not standing for anything. A label like that is not good for any candidate, let alone one who was patently uninspiring on the stump and struggling to distinguish himself from his major opponent.

The other Factor was Gary Hart. He and his new ideas campaign caught fire among the technocratic, Yuppie wing of the party, and provided it clear contrast to Mondale who for obvious reasons seem like a new deal Democrat of the past rather than of the high-tech future. Gary Hart's support in the party was essentially Obama - blacks,  a plurality of whom were supporting Jesse Jackson's campaign, with a significant portion still supporting Mondale.

Anywho, Hart's new ideas and Kennedy esque campaign image Drew voters to him much more strongly then Glen being a so-called moderate with a space hero background. Glenn crashed and burned in the activist friendly Iowa caucuses while Hart finished second. A distant second, but enough to make him a national figure and Propel him over the top in New Hampshire a week later where he had laid Hedy groundwork in a state not friendly to Mondale.

From that point on it was a two-man race between Mondale and Hart, with Glenn hanging on in the hopes of a miracle which never materialized. The best he ever did was to essentially the for second place in the Alabama primary well behind Mondale on super Tuesday. a day or two after which he dropped out.

Here are three more problems the Glenn campaign had, taken from Pages 76 through 78 of the book visions of America by William a Henry III, a very good making of the president Style Insider's novel about the 84 election.

The first was to hire seasoned professional operatives, tell them they had Authority, then ignore their advice and fire them. Glenn brought the professionals into his campaign in an effort to look less provincial. He succeeded only in making himself seem more isolated and, worse, unwilling to do the hearts logging needed to win. 1 veteran Washington columnist snorted, he's waiting for the puff of white smoke to come up like it does for the Pope.

Glenn's second mistake was in reaching for some issue on which to confront special interest group, so as to underline his independence and, by implication, mondale's excessive difference. Unfortunately, the group he chose to confront was homosexuals and the occasion was a New York City Forum to which he got himself invited, regarding gay rights legislation. The book notes Glenn was not a bigot and had an open homosexual as one of his top campaign aides. But that fact made it his decision all the worst in the eyes of aides and reporters which saw what he did is cynical grandstanding. The fact he did it in New York which at the time had and increasingly powerful gay rights movement her him in the local press which transmitted to the national press. It drove out one of his few elected official supporters who represented a largely gay district in the state assembly.

The third mishap was not primarily of Glens making, but it was by far the worst. New York Times columnist William safire prompted in part by remarks Glenn had made in private at a dinner party, questioned and print weather Glen was sufficiently friendly toward Israel. While he took steps to mollify powerful American Jewish organizations, the damage was done.

In all, Glenn was a much better presidential candidate on paper than he was in reality. It's a shame because out of all the many candidates running that year, in hindsight he was probably the best qualified to lead the nation from 1984 onwards, including both my choice of the time, Gary hard, and President Reagan himself.
Logged
Badger
badger
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 40,424
United States


« Reply #1 on: August 27, 2018, 06:43:50 PM »


Actually Mondale and Gary Hart, but that makes it all the sadder and more pathetic.
Logged
Pages: [1]  
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.02 seconds with 12 queries.